A nudi was my first thought- it's about an inch or so and whitish- I caught it and put it in a mesh bag overnight- not sure if it survived or got out. I took a look at the link you gave- doesn't quite look like any of them- has antennae . when I caught it, it was crawling on rock-looked like it was eating algaeWow! Pretty cool looking. Looks like a nudibranch to me. What color is it?
There are many kinds, some eat algae and are great cleanup crew, others eat zoas or other coral so are undesirable. Keep an eye on your coral for any signs they’re being snacked on. I had some Zoa-eating ones that hitchhiked into my tank that were smaller; a yellow coris wrasse cleaned them out quickly. First I saw one it was in middle of a zoa colony and I watched it munching on them...freaked me out.
Hope this is one of the good guys!
I'm at the point where I'd want to confirm exactly what it is and then decide. I have a similar tank philosophy, bristle worms are great cuc and I pick asterina stars off the glass as I see them to keep them under control and let the rest be.I posted the pic on a few FB group pages- all agree that is some kind of nudi- all say kill it.
Yeah, looks like one- either a Cuthona or Trinchesea Albocrusta. Not much info out there on it, one article said it eats aptasia, my corals all look fine, I may never see it again unless I stay up late- a night crawler- time will tellWhite-crusted Aeolid nudi looks like it. Can’t find what they eat. Let us know if you keep them is any coral are suffering and which ones. Good luck.
Get yourself a flashlight with a red lens. Then you can watch stuff at night without disturbing it. It’s really the only time I see my coral banded shrimp.Yeah, looks like one- either a Cuthona or Trinchesea Albocrusta. Not much info out there on it, one article said it eats aptasia, my corals all look fine, I may never see it again unless I stay up late- a night crawler- time will tell
One reason I don't have a coral banded or other things that only come out at night- I'm in bed asleep- or trying- but a red light would be good to have for checking in between night bathroom runs lolGet yourself a flashlight with a red lens. Then you can watch stuff at night without disturbing it. It’s really the only time I see my coral banded shrimp.
Now you got me thinking. I guess fish etc don't see red light, but it's good enough to watch/see things after dark. So, why doesn't someone make a red led light bar- or does it already existGet yourself a flashlight with a red lens. Then you can watch stuff at night without disturbing it. It’s really the only time I see my coral banded shrimp.
Aiptasia not the end of the world. Montipora eating nudibranch waaay worse.I have bubble algae, vermetids, bristle worms, asterina…but I saw a nudi I eating my coral so removes it and put in a natural predator. Would hate to ever see aiptasia. Some things are known to be harmful….to me those aren’t worth the gamble. I added a falco hawkfish a few years back and my skunk cleaner lost that gamble…